The higher and better use argument is so compelling. I wish there were a way to properly codify it. While I personally would like to see this building retained, I also believe there is a tipping point where redevelopment of the site COULD be a net benefit to the neighborhood and to the City, but a fast food box in a sea of surface parking is not it. The traffic impact concern is also extremely valid, and one area where the PC does indeed have defensible purview.
The community at large has an actual BUSINESS interest in retaining structures like this and seeing them be properly maintained instead of being victims of a structured "too far gone to fix" argument via owner-deferred maintenance. This is such an intellectually dishonest approach, and easy to refute now thanks to a large number of recent and highly successful small scale rehabilitation projects in the core.
The other business interest the city has is in tax generation, although again I'm not sure there is an enforcement mechanism. I don't have data to back this up, but I would strongly suspect that the building as currently occupied actually generates more sales tax than will a Braum's, employs more people than does a Braum's, and possibly even generates more ad valorem than would a Braum's. Keep in mind that a Braum's by nature is a disposable structure with a planned life of maybe 20 years and all of that parking does virtually zero for property tax value.
An intangible business interest the city has is the loss of cultural impact. I know we should probably take lists and rankings with a grain of salt, but it's harder to dismiss accolades like the
recent article in Food & Wine. Just as OKC is gaining some ground from a reputation standpoint - this despite how much stories from the state at large lately continue reinforce stereotypes - we are forced to make decisions like this that cause us to backslide.
Literally ZERO of our positive national recognition comes about because of how many convenient Braum's locations we have. That is not a knock on Braum's which of course itself serves a valid purpose. But the places that drive national reputation, the places that bring us "cool factor," the things that convince bright and creative people to relocate and invest in our city and convince OKC-born-and-raised college graduates to stay, all usually have common DNA. Read the stories. These "cool factor" places are almost universally places born of adaptive reuse of interesting old buildings. They are authentic. They are cultural touchstones.
This one doesn't even have to be adapted; the businesses are already there. The place just needs TLC and an owner who gives a **** about any of the stuff I wrote above. The fact that previous offers have been made on the place and ignored by the owner only proves the point that this is STRUCTURED maintenance deferral with a demolition end game. The fact that previous offers have been made and ignored ALSO demonstrates that the "if you care so much about this place you should have bought it yourself" argument is a straw man and completely disingenuous.
The whole thing - which at this point is just a replay of many other fights like this - is getting really , really tiresome and discouraging.
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